Jehanne’s world was entrenched in the Hundred Years War, in which the succession to the throne was in dispute and French factions, royal insanity, adultery, kidnapping, assassination were the drama of the day. France was divided internally, and English forces seized control of the north country. The battle raged over who would sit on the French throne, Charles VII or Henry VI, and things did not look good for the French.

Thirteen year old daughter of lower class landowners, Jehannette began to hear voices of Saints who told her she must see that Charles VII, Le Dauphin, accede the French throne. At the age of sixteen, urged on by the word of God, she took action and managed to get a kinsman to escort her to a nearby garrison where she tried to convince the commander to permit her to visit the French court at Chinon. Denied, but she could not ignore the Lord's command; her second petition contained a prediction of an upcoming military outcome. When her prophecy was realized, she was escorted to court.

She actually was granted an interview with Le Dauphin, who had her examined by theologians in order to verify her authenticity. They counseled Charles to heed the teenage girl. What kind of person was this who could undergo questioning by a commission of ecclesiastic men for weeks and walk away with their support and confirmation of her morality? What desperate days and times, what unusual circumstances, what desire to believe and be saved; they were looking for magic.

Against all modern day rational thinking, Jehanne was sent to the front lines. She armored herself and inserted herself into war councils, managing to lead small armies of villagers and common soldiers when the military refused to support her aggressive tactics or even take her seriously. And she began to succeed. Suffering an arrow wound, and blow from a canon ball, she never lost courage. Amazingly, she persuaded Charles VII to give her co-leadership of the army. May I remind you that this is an uneducated farm girl in her teens with no military training, neither physical nor strategic.

Well, The Maid of Orleans plowed through France, regaining control of various places, her eye and mind on Reims, for to coronate Le Dauphin as the angels urged her on. She prophesied along the way, wrote letters to the French citizens and English overseers, and her words became truth. She spoke magic.

This dark haired girl stood under five feet tall. She was stocky and kept her hair cut short. She wore plain armor (it wasn’t actually “white” as stories like to say. White armor is a variety that is unadorned). She is quoted to say that she preferred to carry her standard (bearing the image of God, angels and the fleur de lis, the names Jesus and Maria) rather than her sword. But carry a sword she did, after remote viewing it hidden behind an altar in St. Catharine’s church and having it brought to her. At times it rested in a red velvet scabbard.

Having no training in swordsmanship, yet being in the front lines in battle, I imagine the Maid of France moved among the soldiers shouting encouragement, giving warning, interceding where she could, raising her standard of faith and creating powerful morale. She turned the tides. She made magic.

Jeanne D'Arc was captured when she was the last to leave the field in a skirmish. She refused to surrender. She attempted to escape her tower prison by jumping 70 feet. She was unharmed. She was brought to trial for heresy, and the English were determined to see her brought down. Obliterated.

Her trial was a travesty. The judge’s jurisdiction was in question, the appointed cleric could find no adverse evidence so a trial should not have been initiated. But it was. Jeanne was denied a legal advisor, even upon her demanding her rights. She frightened the English troops with her victories, her valor, and herself. They whispered of spells, witches, and magic.

The most renowned statement from the Maid of Heaven as recorded in the trial transcript demonstrates her brilliance: "Asked if she knew she was in God's grace, she answered: 'If I am not, may God put me there; and if I am, may God so keep me.'" Answering such she preserved herself from the question’s snare; had she answered yes, she would have convicted herself of heresy but if she had answered no, she would have confessed her own guilt. Later testimony from Notary Boisguillaume says "Those who were interrogating her were stupefied."

Further testimonies from several court functionaries indicate that significant portions of the transcript were altered to Joan’s discredit. Many clerics served under duress and English death threats, including the inquisitor. Joan’s pleas for ecclesiastical justice were denied and the illegal conditions and proceedings were upheld.

The court records were tampered with and there is contradiction in the court findings. Joan signed a renunciation document that she was unable to read (farm folk in those days were illiterate) because she was threatened with immediate execution, but a substitute was included in the court’s official record. Had she used up all her magic?

We know how the trial ended; The Maiden was convicted of heresy and her punishment was execution by burning. "Alas! Am I to be so horribly and cruelly treated? Alas! That my body, clean and whole, which has never been corrupted, should this day be consumed and burned to ashes! Ah! I would far rather have my head chopped off seven times over, than to be burned!"On May 30, 1431, she was tied to a tall pillar in the Vieux-Marche in Rouen, wearing a cross a local peasant made for her. She requested two clergymen to hold a crucifix before her. And the fires were lit. She called out the name of Jesus as she was consumed.

Such was the power of Jehanne that once the flames burned out the English raked back the coals for all to see that she had not escaped alive. Twice more were her remains burned so that no piece of her but ashes might endure. Then those ashes were thrown into the Seine. There would be no bodily relics of the Maiden, no lingering magic.

When the war ended a posthumous retrial opened. Testimony from 115 witnesses was analyzed. The Inquisitor-General declared Joan a martyr and implicated the late bishop presiding at her trial with heresy for having convicted an innocent woman in pursuit of a nonreligious feud. Joan was declared innocent in 1456.

Beatified in 1909, the Catholic Church said yeah, Joan went to Heaven. And if you ask her nicely, she’ll whisper in God’s ear on your behalf. Then in 1920 she was canonized and was declared Saint Joan, the Blessed Virgin. To be canonized you have to have “lived and died in such an exemplary and holy way that he or she is worthy to be recognized as a saint". I agree with how she lived, but I cannot abide the idea that her execution is categorized as exemplary or holy. There is no magic in that.

Called a lesbian because she dressed in armor as a military leader. Called schizophrenic because she had visions. Called a heretic because she followed God’s words to her death. Called a witch because she was burned by the church. Called a heroine of her country. This girl was a vessel to be sure, and we fill her with what we will. I am not French, nor Catholic, but Joan’s unerring faith in her god and her mission and her fate move me to greater thoughts than religion and country. I am reminded of certain indigenous tribes who sacrifice of themselves so that their people may live, and it is humbling. It is her timeless gift of magic.

The Thirtieth of May is the feast day of Saint Joan, this year the 578th anniversary of her death. I raise a glass to you, Jehanne La Pucelle. Blessed be.

Monday, May 25, 2009

I love making shell jewelry. The process is part of the collective unconscious, the mysterious human memory. It is magic.

The shells I use are all either found by me or a family member on our travels. I spend lots of time beachcombing when I go back to my hometown on the Jersey shore every summer. Trawling through tide pools and jetties, grabbing at the surf and shifting huge piles of shell debris at the tide line is my idea of a fantastic day. I’ve turned my kids into treasure hunters and gatherers as well. Oh the thrill of a perfect specimen, or a bit that resembles some religious icon, or Elvis. Yes the simple pleasures run deep.

Once they’re all properly cleaned and sorted (I organize everything into divided containers according to type, size, completeness, etc etc- it’s a time consuming and sick habit, to be sure) I have to find the muse. No, her name is not Shelly, or something-or-other Clam, but she can be evasive and fickle. Making shell and gem assemblage pendants has me channeling Greek mermaids, and I have tapped into some tiny faerie shell collectors as well.

There is an ancient heritage of shell adorners, actually. The oldest beads ever excavated are shells with perforations showing wear around the edges and traces of red ochre, and they are perhaps 110,000 years old. Did you get that? One hundred and ten *thousand* years old. That means that our cave dwelling ancestors were much more sophisticated than anyone had previously thought. They most likely made the holes themselves, and painted them with the same stuff found on cave walls, and they strung them on fibers or sinew, or attached them to clothing.

There is symbolism behind personal adornment, and language to describe it. Necklaces and bracelets with painted shell beads could display wealth, social status, marital status, religious importance, and just plain bling. Humans have been artful bead collectors and independent makers for a hundred thousand years; the same types of shell beads (Nassarius gibbosulusshells) have been discovered in Israel and Algeria dating close to the 100k mark, and in South Africa closer to 70,000 years ago. In a cave in Morocco not only were these oldest shell beads recently unearthed, but also a large 12,500 year old necropolis. Could it be that the freshwater spring rising next to the cave, a perfect mermaid portal, gave it special significance for our predecessors over many millennia? (That’s my story and you can’t tell me it’s not true!)

This gets me all crazy excited and thinking and dreaming and wondering. Wow. WOW. Imagine it…

Monday, May 18, 2009

Well, why the heck not? I can only revel in so many pink and yellow fairies before I find myself missing bats and witch hats. My friend Carapace over at Cara Makes blog had the best idea for a Pay It Forward in the spirit of Halloween, and I jumped right in.

Here's the deal:You be one of the first three commenters on this post, you get a Halloweeny suprise, handmade by none other than me. Each prize will be different, and I am going to custom make it according to the recipient. But winning is not all, of course you yourself must go forth and Pay in the same way, by offering a similar small bit of early Halloween to three readers on your blog, and linking back to me. Somewhat of a chain for good, with no dire retribution if you don't want to play.

Leave a comment, share a spell, tell me about your favorite Halloween costume or the best broom ride you ever went on.I'm looking for the first three charmers who are paying attention; I'm not going to Tweet or post anywhere else, but do stop by Cara Makes and see why I'm a loyal follower ;]

Friday, May 15, 2009

The modern witch hat in its current form, such as the Luella runway pic from her Fall '08 collection, was widely pictured beginning in Victorian times. Until then, it was basically a memory of the past. I believe the origins are very ancient, and have magical and religious significance. I'm not alone in this belief, but it's a controversial theory and one that will never be proven one way or another. So feel free to take from this what you will and come to your own conclusion. In a nutshell:

Along the Silk Road in China a woman's mummy was discovered and dated to the mid 1st millennium BCE. One of her adornments was a tall dark felt hat with two conical peaks. Yet another female body excavated also wore a very tall, conical hat. Chinese references to Western magicians date back to 1500 BCE.

Ancient Persian magicians wore a tall pointy hat. Egyptian pharaohs had a tall dome piece, as did Hittite kings and queens. Certain ancient Roman priestesses and priests assigned to a particular god or goddess wore a conical cap. A coin from the Etruscan city of Luna (ahem) bears the image of a woman (thought to be the goddess Diana, patron of witches) wearing a conical hat. Bishops, the pope, present day priests in Tibet- all have upward- reaching head gear.

A bit more current were fashion trends of Europe. Loads of wonderful headgear was worn in

the Middle Ages and Renaissance periods. In the sixteenth and seventeenth centuries popular style trickled out into the country and folk picked up on the tall hat look. But then of course the courtly fashion had changed, peasants (pagans) were despised and accused of deviltry, and they were pointed at wearing their pointy hat. This continues with the persecution of Quakers in America; recall the "pilgrim" hat?

Today some neo-pagans attribute the witch hat to the "cone of power", but this just seems convenient to me. The roots are ancient, and I honor them by celebrating my own vision of the witch hat.

Twitter

My Witch Hats

About Me

I'm a mom to 3 amazing boys, and wife to a music aficionado. My artsy crafty business, Mermaiden Creations, has grown and evolved over the years out of an obsessive compulsive need to create and articulate the constant stream of ideas flowing into my head. For me, creating is an exercise in magic. I find the polarity of weird beauty fascinating, as well as the combination of things dark and light. I love to listen to weird folk music and read fantasy novels and archaeology text books. You'll find me at weekend kids sports events or well past midnight donning my favorite witch hat.